How'd it go today?

I was planning to have a few chill relaxed days breezing through this job, but thats not happening now LOL

almost want to call my crane guy and see if he's available, but we don't have the ground crew to keep up since we'd be doing 6000 pound picks constantly, 2 picks and trucks full, 10 minutes per pick, its 45 minutes round trip for me to dump assuming I don't get stuck at the dump, crane would do more sitting than working
 
I was planning to have a few chill relaxed days breezing through this job, but thats not happening now LOL

almost want to call my crane guy and see if he's available, but we don't have the ground crew to keep up since we'd be doing 6000 pound picks constantly, 2 picks and trucks full, 10 minutes per pick, its 45 minutes round trip for me to dump assuming I don't get stuck at the dump, crane would do more sitting than working
Around here we would hire a grapple truck to haul it. About $500 for them to load and haul 65 yards of tree debris. Just stack it up where they can get to it. But maybe you are too far out in the sticks to have any local grapple truck companies.
 
This morning I pulled up to my local diner and saw this parked out front. A 1947 Lincoln. Upon closer inspection it is obviously a resto-mod with modern drivetrain and conveniences like power windows and air conditioning. An old transmission guy on another forum pointed out the original came with a flathead v-12 engine and manual trans 3 on the tree. Steering column is from a newer vehicle. Very nicely done, the car is gorgeous!
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I didn't find my old post on the M18 top handle, but my big complaint was the chain speed. It has tons of torque, but really wants to be dogged and pushed. Small branches were a pain because it wasn't aggressive enough. I filed with the 4.5mm files that lxsklr sent me, and then took five swipes on each raker. That was enough to make a huge difference. In the limited amount I've been able to use it, I've noticed it pulls better, rather than having to dog it as hard. Battery life is improved. I packed it in on the trail to cut up an 18"+ red oak that fell on a bridge. It only used half of an 8.0 Forge battery.

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Around here we would hire a grapple truck to haul it. About $500 for them to load and haul 65 yards of tree debris. Just stack it up where they can get to it. But maybe you are too far out in the sticks to have any local grapple truck companies.
theres 2 guys here with grapple trucks (that will work for others, the rest won't), one is a drunk that I quit working for, plus his truck was broken down literally every time I'd call him, the other guy wants a thousand bucks for his ~65yd truck loaded, and good luck getting on the schedule

grapple truck was an idea, but in the long run itll be faster and cheaper to chip it on this job, I do hire a grapple when theres lots of vines, never again will I chip vines, spend 6 hours sitting inside the slider box with a pair of pliers and a silky, and you will rethink a lot of life choices
 
I wish there were grapple trucks around here for hire. Northern and Lewis have their own.
If I custom saw again, I have decided that if you don't take your slabs with you, then you pay me $20/hr extra, and that goes for trucking and disposal fees.
 
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